Jim Barraud web designer

Email Standards Project

HTML formated emails are considered the spawn of the devil by some. And by others it’s considered the next evolutionary step in email. Whichever side you sit on, both agree the HTML formated emails aren’t going anywhere and will only become more popular.

From a developers point of view, creating an HTML formatted email can be about as fun as root canal. Why? Because as opposed to browsers, which there are only 2-3 core browsers (calm down fringe browser people), there are 10-15 core email clients. The level HTML and CSS support varies greater then the level of support the browsers had in the dark days of the browser wars. To encourage browser makers to comply to the basic set of web standards support, the Web Standards Project was created. This was (and still is) a group that lobbied browser makers to support web standards. Proving that it was not only for the benefit for web developer, but also for end users and the browser makers themselves. They have been extremely successful their efforts.

The Email Standards Project aims to do the same for HTML/CSS standards support within email clients. They’ve just launched their official site which contains info on why this matters, what you can do, and a list of popular email clients and their current level of standards support. They’ve even created an Email Standards Acid Test for testing the level of support of each email client.

I encourage anyone who has to create HTML formated emails or anyone who relies on them as promotional tools for their business to visit the Email Standards Project and show your support.

Homedics

The latest project to launch at the Hive is the online presence for Homedics. Homedics sells as an extensive line of personal health and wellness products. You may have seen some of their commercials on TV lately.

Media-Hive was tasked with the visual design of their new website/eStore and integrating that design into the ATG Commerce OnDemand platform. My comrades at the Hive did an excellent job with both the visual design and the implementation of that design into the platform. I had a minor role in the beginning of the visual design process with presenting one of several design directions. While it wasn’t picked for further refinement, you can view my original design direction below.

Homedics

Mercer Museum

Mercer Museum Set

The wife and I took one of our regular Bucks County day trips this past holiday weekend and visited the Mercer Museum. Choice quote of the museum visit was “So, this is basically a museum of really old stuff”. To which the wife replied “Yes dear, this is a museum of really old stuff”.

What I meant to say was, “So, this is a museum of pre-industrial tools and artifacts collected by Henry Chapmen Mercer.” Really. It’s what I meant to say.

View the Flickr Set

Sheila Rich Interiors

sheilarich

Website design for interior designer Sheila Rich. Sheila needed a site to showcase her impressive body of interior design work. In addition to offering her renowned design services to both residential and corporate clients, Mrs. Rich writes “Rich Ideas”, a monthly newspaper column now in it’s fifth year of publication. Photos or her interior design work as well her “Rich Ideas” articles are showcased on the site.

Simply Skin

Simply Skin

This weekend I launched my latest freelance project. A website redesign for a local day spa, Simply Skin. The redesign included a complete information architecture and aesthetic makeover.

The goals of the project that were achieved are:

  • Improved Information Architecture - The navigation of the new site is simpler then the previous. The top level navigation decreased from 8 items to 6 due to the consolidation of navigation items that were similar in nature. I’ve also employed the use a of “fat bottom” footer that contains useful information, such as spa hours, regardless of where you are on the site.
  • More Modern Aesthetics - The aesthetics of the previous site had a predominantly feminine feel using various shades of pinks as the color palette. One of the main aesthetic goals for the new site was to make a more male friendly. This actually tied in with the other main aesthetic goal of the site, to make it more in tune with the recent renovation at the spa. This resulted in eliminating the pink and introducing beach cottage colors that tie into the new feel of the Spa.
  • Addition of a Content Management System - It was important for the employees of the spa to have the capability to update the site with new services, prices, and products as the need arose. For this, the site has been built upon the WordPress content management system. The flexibility of the WordPress architecture and extendibility of it via the various plugins available made it possible to make every bit of content easily manageable.
  • Adding the Simply Skin Product Line for Online Purchase - The previous site offered it’s clients the ability to purchase spa gift cards online. With the redesign, we took that concept a step further by offering Simply Skin’s own line of spa products for purchase online.

My role in the project was that of a one man band. Design, Development, WordPress Integration, Paypal Integration, Project Management & Photography (for Spa Orientation & Spa Tour).

The site can viewed at http://simplysdayspa.com

Feed Burnin’

I’ve transfered my RSS feeding duties over to FeedBurner for all the cool things that feed burner offers. The old feed will still work fine. But if you’re currently subscribed to the old feed, unsubscribing and subscribing to the new FeedBurner URL would be peachy. Thanks.

http://feeds.feedburner.com/jimbarraud

iCal Reminder Fix

While the upgrade to Leopard has overall been a great thing, as with any OS upgrade, there have been some issues. Many of these I listed in my Leopard Observations post. But the most annoying and persistent has been that of iCal not firing off any reminder alarms. I rely heavily on these to remind me of meetings and conference calls and not having the reminders has been a huge pain in the ass. And I’m not the only one with this issue.

I was hoping that the first Leopard point release 10.5.1 would solve this (and other) issues, but it hasn’t. After a couple of quick tests, alarms still aren’t firing… then rage ensues. After taking a deep breath and doing a little digging into the iCal library support files, I discovered two glimmers of hope. alarmsCache.plist and notifications.plist. These two files are located in the /Library/Application Support/iCal directory. After removing these files and restarting iCal, my reminder alarms have miraculously sprung back to life. Hallelujah! I don’t think these files are anything more that cache and preference files, but you never know. So remove at your own risk.

I post this for anyone else suffering from this bug in hopes that it will save you some sanity.

Update: Nevermind. After fixing this several times, after a few days it just reverts back to not working. If anyone has a definitive fix, please let me know.

Customizable Starbucks Cards

starbuckscard.png

The holiday’s are coming up and you know what that means… gift card season. I’m actually a big fan of gift cards. Give me a Starbucks or Barnes & Noble gift card and I’m a happy man.

Starbucks is doing something cool this year with their gift card offerings and allowing you to create customized gift cards. You choose from four basic templates, then personalize the card for the person on the receiving end. Place your order to send off your holiday cheer.

This is all done on the Starbucks website (this isn’t a construction paper and glue stick operation). The interface is elegant and simple with much hand holding throughout the customization process. You can also buy gift vouchers within the store that allow the receiver to go online and customize their own card.

Leopard Observations

I’ve been working with Apple’s new operating system for a couple weeks now and figured I’d post up some of my observations.

  • The overall level of visual polish is higher then any previous OSX release. The entire system feels more cohesive.
  • The new dock is an atrocity. But I rock mine on the left of the screen so I get the much more pleasing alternate dock.
  • I thought the new transparent menu bar would bug me, but so far it hasn’t.
  • Spotlight is actually usable. Fast enough to make a great app launcher and search results appear faster and seem more relevant.
  • The new ToDo’s and notes features in Mail are a great addition and I can see myself using them regularly. But currently they’re almost unusable if your making ToDo’s within Notes. There seems to be a bug that decides to randomly make items you’ve designated as ToDo’s in your notes… to not be ToDo’s but just sentences of text.
  • It’s nice having a system wide ToDo’s system. But it would be helpful if they were color coded in mail in accordance to the color of the calendar they’re associated with.
  • The new Mail.app is much improved in terms of performance and features. But also suffers from a bug that randomly decides to not show your message in the bottom preview pane unless you select it twice.
  • I’m finding Spaces to be super handy. Other’s are finding issues with how it’s been implemented. I understand the issues being argued, but my personal workflow hasn’t really hit it (yet).
  • You can now double click an image embedded in an iChat window and it’ll open in preview. This was previously only doable if you’ve installed the Chax plugin.
  • iCal is much better at handling Exchange based calendar invites (and changes). Not perfect mind you, but much improved. They also seem to have done away with the asinine requirement of having your email being defined in the invite in order for you to accept it. Which was a tremendous pain in the ass for invites sent to mailing list groups.
  • As great as the iCal improvements are, it seems riddled with as many bugs as Mail. My alerts no longer work, which is torture for someone who relies on them. And there are times where it will not allow me to pick the calendar I would like a meeting invite to be placed in.
  • When you take a selective screenshot, you now get X&Y coordinates next to your cursor. And when you start creating your screenshot selecting, it displays the height and width of your selection. This is super cool. (And it’s small touches like this throughout the OS that make it awesome.)

There are many other cool new features and a few more minor annoyances, but these are the items I come across and affect me on a day-to-day level.

What’s your favorite color… today?

Fellow Media-Hive cohort Mr. Sykes has launched yet another one of his pet projects. Hexday.com. The concept? Pick a color, but only one. Come back tomorrow and do it again. Rinse. Repeat. Feeling orange today? Or maybe blue? How do your color picks relate to the rest of the community?

This is one of those concepts when pitched to you, you respond with a “huh?” or “why?” or “I don’t get it.” And honestly, I’m in the “I don’t get it crowd”. Yet, the morning rolls by and I pick my color. I check to see what the people I know have picked. Not sure why, but I do. It’s just one of those things.

Future features include buddies, RSS & widgets. But the interesting thing will be once this has been up and running for a period time. Then crunching the colors to see what kind of trends can be found based on time of day, time of the year and how your colors relate to your buddies.

So yes, you’re probably saying “huh?”, “why?” or “I don’t get it.” But that’s also what they said (and some still say) about Twitter. And now they’re struggling to keep up with the volume.

So what’s your color?

Embrace the Online Calendar

Being a parent comes with it’s fair share of lifestyle changes. Most you come to expect in the beginning of your child’s life. Sleepless nights, dirty diapers, screaming, etc. But no one seems to prepare you for the later years. And by later years, I mean 3-6 years old. These are the years your child will set forth into the world of Preschool, Kindergarten and extracurricular activities. Along will all social training you and your child will need to endure learn, there’s one other issue I’d like to highlight. Paper.

Your child will begin to bring home massive amounts of paper in various forms. From sign-up forms, approval forms, book-order forms, class projects, everyday schoolwork and calendars. This massive influx of paper can wreak havoc on a person who’s attempting to wage a war on clutter. But what I would like to talk about are the calendars.

All of the paper goods your child will be bringing into the home will fall into three categories. Trash material: pointless notices (not as much as you hope). Fridge material: recent class projects to show off and reference material always needed on hand (like calendars). Archive Material: Older school projects and long term reference papers like school policies, etc.

My fridge has no less then 4 calendars plastered on it at any one time. You have items like; Normal school calendar (days off, special events, etc), Lunch calendar (what’s for lunch… if it should be “one of those mornings”), karate schedule (the boy), and the dance schedule (the girl). I say no less then 4 because with my wife being a teacher, there’s usually more calendars involved.

Then there’s the regular family calendars. These are thankfully entered nicely into the computer and are shared between the wife and I. These calendars can all be nicely cross-referenced for conflicts and availability. Works a treat in this modern age. What doesn’t work in this modern age is various paper calendars plastered all over my fridge. The solution? Online calendars.

There are various free online calendars that organizations and users can utilize for posting their respective schedules. Google Calendar is my personal online calendar of choice. These calendars can be shared and then subscribed to by the modern technological parents of the world. Thus freeing them (us) from the fury that is paper calendars. (For bonus points, use a calendar that publishes to an “iCal” format. This is a standard format that most modern desktop calendar programs can subscribe to.) One could argo that we could enter in these events into our own personal electronic calendar. Which is something I’ve done with our garbage schedule. But there’s two main issues with this.

The first issue is time. Modern parents can barely make the time to run their family as it is, much less sit down for a couple hours and enter in your child’s Lunch schedule every month. The second issue is accuracy. Wouldn’t it be great if there was a change in any one of your child’s schedules that you were just notified through your electronic calendar?

I know there are organizations and schools out there that already do this. And I applaud you. But unfortunately none of mine do. So please, embrace the online calendar. It will save you time and resources (think of the trees!) and save us, the modern parents of today’s world, the little sanity we have left.